Gobby Explained

Gobby
Author:Armin Burgmeier
Developer:0x539 dev group
Latest Release Version:0.6.0
Programming Language:C++, C.
Operating System:Unix, Windows
Genre:Text editor
License:GNU GPLv2+

Gobby is a free software collaborative real-time editor available on Windows and Unix-like platforms.[1] (It runs on Mac OS X using Apple's X11.app.) It was initially released in June 2005 by the 0x539 dev group (the hexadecimal value 0x539 is equal to 1337 in decimal). Gobby uses GTK+ for its GUI widgets.

Description

Gobby features a client-server architecture which supports multiple documents in one session, document synchronisation on request, password protection and an IRC-like chat for communication out of band.[2] Users can choose a colour to highlight the text they have written in a document. Gobby is fully Unicode-aware, provides syntax highlighting for most programming languages, and has basic Zeroconf support.

A dedicated server called Sobby is also provided, together with a script which could format saved sessions for the web (e.g. to provide logs of meetings with a collaboratively prepared transcript).[3] The collaborative editing protocol is named Obby, and there are other implementations that use this protocol (e.g. Rudel,[4] a plugin for GNU Emacs). Gobby 0.5 replaces Sobby with a new server called infinoted.[5]

Version 0.4.0 featured fully encrypted connections and further usability enhancements. Users have commented versions prior to 0.5.0 had some issues.[6]

Versions numbered 0.4.9x are preview releases for version 0.5.0. The most noticeable improvement is undo support, using the adOPTed algorithm for concurrency control.

Criticisms

While offering Unicode support it has been suggested the product is suitable for producing plaintext rather than formatted documents.[7]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Collaborative text editing with Gobby. Linux.com. 2019-07-09. 2006-07-11. Joe. Brockmeier.
  2. Web site: Group text editing with Gobby. linux.com. Federico. Kereki. 2007-09-24.
  3. Web site: Setting up a dedicated server to host EOS Sessions Tutorial . 2023-12-12 . Epic Developer Community . en-us.
  4. Web site: Rudel . EmacsWiki.org . 2014-10-23 . 2016-07-16.
  5. Web site: Working together on text and source code with Gobby and infinoted. 2019-07-09. TechMonks. 2010-12-27. Evert. Mouw. 27 March 2017. https://web.archive.org/web/20170327110321/http://techmonks.net/working-together-on-text-and-source-code-with-gobby-and-infinoted/. dead.
  6. Web site: Three years of teaching using collaborative tools: patterns and lessons learned. Andrea. Trentini. https://web.archive.org/web/20190709143111/https://www.researchgate.net/publication/260123171_Three_years_of_teaching_using_collaborative_tools_patterns_and_lessons_learned. 9 July 2019. University of Milan. 1 January 2013.
  7. Web site: 5 open source alternatives to Google Docs. Opensource.com. Tatiana. Kochedykova. 9 July 2019.